HOCKEY IN THE HIMALAYAS
When they first heard there was a hockey league in northern India 12 years ago, Canadian officials in Delhi had to see for themselves. What they found astonished them: players in old cricket pads using field hockey sticks to shoot around a shoe polish tin
More than three kilometres above sea level, below a mountain peak topped by a Buddhist monastery, a town in India has gone hockey-crazy. And thanks to Canadian help, they no longer use cricket gear.
Three-and-a-half kilometres above sea level, near the roof of the world where the air is thin and the vistas rich, the extremely short hockey shift is about all a visiting player can handle before he heads off the ice, puffing.
“The locals have the stamina for this, but for us visitors it’s 20-second shifts,” says Brian Jablon, one of those visitors. “It’s the only way we’ll make it through three periods. Two years ago, one of our guys passed out midway through the second period!”
Jablon plays for a team called the Sacred Bulls. Although it’s mostly made up of members of Canada’s High Commission in Dehli, Jablon is head of security at the American Embassy in the Indian capital.
The story of how he and his teammates came to play in a hockey tournament nearly 700 kilometres — and a universe — away from their home base actually began 12 years ago. Not surprisingly, it’s a distinctly Canadian story.
It’s no secret cricket is India’s passion, a game that means as much to Indians as hockey does to Canadians. The entire country is known to come to a standstill when India is playing one of its fiercest rivals, Pakistan or Sri Lanka, in a crucial international match.
But here in the otherworldly heights of this sleepy Himalayan town in the Indian region of Ladakh, a place famous for its Buddhist monasteries and awe-inspiring peaks, something improbable has developed: a hockey hot bed.
“From the moment the snow falls in December until it melts in the spring, Ladakh lives and breathes ice hockey,” says N.A. Gyapo, the head of the Ladakh Winter Sports Club. “This is truly remarkable considering the region’s geographic isolation.”
And isolated it is. At 3,484 metres, Leh can only be accessed by air in the winter, and only when the weather allows.
“Between the fog in Delhi and the harsh Himalayan weather conditions, it’s 50-50 whether your flight will take off on any given day,” says an employee of Jet Airways, which runs regular flights into the mountain town.
With the odds so unfavourable, it’s no surprise tourism is restricted to the summer trekking months. But for three days every January, the town reinvents itself with what’s come to be known as the Indo-Canadian Friendship Ice-hockey Tournament.
The tournament’s roots were planted a dozen years ago when a group of Indian officials visited the High Commission in Delhi looking for visas so they could bring hockey equipment from Canada to India.
Tony Kretzschmar, captain of the Sacred Bulls and a primary organizer of the tournament, says Canadian officials at first thought it was some sort of scam.
“Ice hockey and India aren’t exactly notions that go hand in hand,” he explains.
But with their interest piqued, a couple of high commission staff decided to venture to Little Tibet, as Ladakh is sometimes called, to investigate for themselves.
What they discovered astounded them.
“Local Ladakhis were playing the game with used field hockey sticks and cricket pads and skates made from army boots with homemade blades nailed to them,” Kretzschmar recalls. “Pucks were no more than shoe polish tins.”
And they were playing outdoors in deep sub-zero temperatures.
It turned out that Canada’s national passion had been introduced to land-locked Ladakh more than 30 years before, in the late 1960s, by Indian army officers looking for entertaining ways to pass the cold winter months.
Since their visit to Ladakh, staff at the High Commission, along with a handful of Canadian MPs, the National Hockey League Players Association and a few NHL teams, including the Montreal Canadiens and Los Angeles Kings, have sponsored a program to channel donations of used equipment to Ladakh, as well as help to train children.
Twelve years later, the result is that locals now play in equipment reminiscent of the early days of Wayne Gretzky — clearly dated by Canadian standards, but a vast improvement over used cricket pads. To complete the retro look, the early ’80s equipment is neatly coupled with a vast array of donated old school hockey sweaters, including those from Lower Canada College in Montreal and the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Calgary.
Winter coaching camps have also been established and are now run by Adam Sherlip, coach of the India’s national hockey team and founder of India’s first ice hockey association, which Sherlip glowingly describes as “an organization that uses ice hockey to help reinforce ideals on the ice — such as accountability, honesty, teamwork, selflessness — as well as address issues off the ice, such as inadequate electrical power or sub-par education standard.”
Other notable developments include the donation of an all-important skate sharpener by the Canadiens and a few recent films that have helped draw attention to Ladakhi’s hockey cause.
As for the annual tournament, it reveals a passion for the sport that rivals those of Canadians. Until this season, the tournament mainly involved the High Commission squad flying into the mountain village to play Ladakhi’s local teams, including the Indo-Tibetan Border Patrol, and to educate the locals in any way they could.
But this year’s event, held last week, took on a truly international dimension with invitations extended to — and accepted by — the London Spitfire, a team based in London, England with a strong Canadian contingent, as well as Geronimo, a German-Finish team.
Spitfire player Michael Teryazos, a Montrealer, says the tournament first came to his attention in an obscure article. When he pitched the idea of participating to his London teammates, the response was overwhelming. Then came the reality. “Minus 15 degrees on an outdoor rink while lining up against (donated) LLC sweaters was a throwback to the frigid Royal Avenue battles while playing at Selwyn House,” Teryazos says, referring to his Montreal prep school days. “Players lost all sense of feeling in their fingers and toes but nonetheless would surrender themselves to the moment.”
Spitfire captain Duncan Hamilton, from Mississauga, says the team enters international tournaments every year, most of them in Eastern Europe.
“But nothing even comes close to the experience of playing hockey at this altitude, and surrounded be this scenery,” he said between the periods of a game, the spectacular 17th century Leh Palace and monastery towering above him from the heights of the Himalayas.
Around the frozen reservoir where the game was being played, yaks and wild dogs were taking in the action alongside the locals, some of them having travelled the eight kilometres from the Spituk Monastery.
On the ice, a six-man strong human “Zamboni” was sweeping snow off the surface with wicker brooms. And in the distance, a call to prayer resonated from the minaret of one of Leh’s mosques. Across the valley, the mighty Indus River was running its course.
“It’s one of the most exhausting hockey experiences of my life,” Duncan says, “but also one of the most rewarding.”
And not just because of the beauty and mystery of the surroundings — “to be able to encourage the development of the game in India” was also a big part of the satisfaction, he says.
In a quiet town such as Leh, hockey has proven to be more than simply a distraction to get through the long winter. It’s become an annual celebration.
Playing on what is almost certainly the highest altitude ice rink in the world, London Spitfire came out victorious against the local teams.
But the real winner, everyone agreed, was ice hockey.